https://nypost.com/2020/07/14/bari-w...stray-goodwin/
                 Bari Weiss exposes how The Times has gone astray: Goodwin            
                                          By 
Michael Goodwin
                             
                          July 14, 2020 | 7:36pm                | 
Updated                              
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                                              AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File             
     
                                                                                                     
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                         Back in 2012, a Goldman Sachs banker famously quit his job in a  New York Times op-ed. On his last day at work, Greg Smith got on the  biggest soap box he could find to declare that Goldman’s culture is  “toxic and destructive.”
 Bari Weiss has now done the same thing to the Times itself. 
Her resignation letter, posted on her Web site, is a classic example of going out with a bang.
 Yet Weiss does something more than just make noise as she’s 
making her exit.  She lays bare a hostile, coercive workplace and describes incidents and  insults that reveal how the Times is the same bully in-house that it is  to those on the outside who don’t subscribe to its warped views.
 In a chilling paragraph, Weiss cites “constant bullying by colleagues  who disagree with my views. They have called me a Nazi and a racist; I  have learned to brush off comments about how I’m ‘writing about the Jews  again.’ ”
 That would make her a Nazi who supports Israel. The bullies need to work on their insults.
 Although Weiss was a writer and editor on the opinion section, she  makes the entire operation, especially the newsroom, sound like a  college campus where dissent is demonized and silenced by threats. Who  knew the Gray Lady could be so nasty?
 Weiss does something else too — she dumps the whole mess in the lap  of 39-year-old publisher A. G. Sulzberger. She addresses her letter to  him and charges he personally stood by silently while a mob mentality  seized control.
 “I do not understand how you have allowed this kind of behavior to go  on inside your company in full view of the paper’s entire staff and the  public,” she writes. “And I certainly can’t square how you and other  Times leaders have stood by while simultaneously praising me in private  for my courage.”
 As extra zingers, she quotes an 1896 line from Times patriarch Adolph  Ochs — the current publisher’s great, great grandfather — who promised  that the paper would always “invite intelligent discussion from all  shades of opinion.”
 Sulzberger himself had quoted the same line in a statement when he  assumed the job of publisher from his father in January of 2018, and  Weiss is cleverly reminding him that he has failed to deliver.
 In that statement, Sulzberger, the fifth member of his family to run  the Times since Ochs died in 1935, all of them men, also promised the  paper would “continue to resist polarization and groupthink by giving  voice to the breadth of ideas and experiences — because we believe  journalism should help people think for themselves.”
 In fact, the Times is doing the opposite. As Weiss notes, groupthink  now dominates the paper’s coverage from front to back and readers are  encouraged to obey, not think.
 If Sulzberger is looking for someone to blame, he should grab a  mirror. His firing of opinion editor James Bennet last month was a green  light to the Twitter mob that the publisher would bow before it, no  matter how outlandish the demands.
 Bennett’s sin was to publish an op-ed from Sen. Tom Cotton that said President Trump 
was right to consider using the military  to quell riots in American cities. In a shocking breach with tradition,  more than 800 Times staff members, the vast majority from the newsroom,  signed a petition denouncing the piece and pushed for Bennett to be  fired.
 By surrendering, Sulzberger betrayed journalism’s best principles and  there’s a straight line from that moment to Weiss’ resignation.
 The publisher should pay special attention to one section of her  letter. Noting she was hired after the Times failed to detect even a  hint that Donald Trump would win the 2016 election, Weiss writes that  the clear aim was to add “voices that would not otherwise appear in your  pages.”
 But instead of being open to those voices, she complains that “a new  consensus has emerged in the press, but perhaps especially at this  paper: that truth isn’t a process of collective discovery, but an  orthodoxy already known to an enlightened few whose job is to inform  everyone else.”
 She’s absolutely right, which is why I have been saying that the  Times no longer functions as an actual newspaper. Its “mission” is to  rewrite the story of America, one that dovetails with the paper’s  obsession with race, gender and every new form of identity politics.
     
                                                              Columnist Andrew Sullivan announces departure from New York magazine                            
                                                                       
                 
                                                                                                                                                   
  The current crisis actually began two years before Sulzberger became  publisher. In the summer of 2016, executive editor Dean Baquet abandoned  the paper’s traditional standards of fairness and impartiality in its  news pages in a bid to block Trump’s election. Since then, virtually  every article on every page has been an editorial where the reporters’  opinions dominate.
 Baquet’s decision to take away the guardrails against bias created a  vacuum that was filled with a radical agenda. The paper is now published  not to give readers facts and information, but to browbeat them with  the far, far left political and social positions of the writers.
 It’s a predictable Lord of the Flies outcome, where the official  party line is the only acceptable position and you either go along or  get out. So day after dreary day, from front to back, the Times reeks  with the delusion that it knows best about everything.
 That bloated hubris is a key reason why I revealed the Confederate  roots of the Ochs-Sulzberger family in my Sunday column. The knowledge  that members of the family, including Och’s mother, Bertha Levy,  supported slavery and Ochs himself donated large sums of money to  Confederate memorials should lead the staff to demand a full accounting  of the family’s history. My fantasy is that the Times will apply the  same standards to its own conduct that it applies to other people and  institutions, and, humbled by what it learns, will be cured of its  arrogance.
 In that sense, Weiss and I are on the same page. We want the Times to  be what it used to be and what Sulzberger promised it would be — a real  newspaper.
 Or is that too much to ask?
 
Mayor’s response to horror? Platitudes
 After gunmen shot and killed 
20-month old Davell Gardner in Brooklyn, here is the reaction of New York’s Worst Mayor Ever:
 “This isn’t something we can allow — to wake up this morning and  learn that a 1-year-old child was killed on the streets of our city by  gunfire is just so painful.”
 Later, he said the continuing surge of violence is “not acceptable,” but didn’t promise to do anything about it.
 HELP!
 
Getting back to school
 Reader George Fitzpatrick has a good question, writing: “When is  someone going to challenge the teachers’ unions for saying they would be  ‘in the line of fire’ by dealing with children if schools are reopened?
 “Does that mean we should close hospitals because doctors and nurses  are ‘in the line of fire’ while dealing with sick patients?”